Railroad & Warehouse Commission ex rel. East Side Packing Co. v. Vandalia Railroad

258 Ill. 397
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 258 Ill. 397 (Railroad & Warehouse Commission ex rel. East Side Packing Co. v. Vandalia Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad & Warehouse Commission ex rel. East Side Packing Co. v. Vandalia Railroad, 258 Ill. 397 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

One of the numerous railroad companies owning and operating lines of railroad in the city of East St. Eouis is the appellant, the Vandalia Railroad Company. The railroad companies have established a regular switching charge of three dollars per car for doing switching service in .the city and delivering cars to industries on their own or other lines or to or from connecting lines. The appellant has demanded and collected, in addition to the regular, switching charge so established, a charge of two dollars as rental of each car switched by it for the East Side Packing Company, which conducts a packing plant on its switch track in the city. The charge has been made under the following provision of appellant’s tariff:

“Rule 2. Car rental.—A charge of two dollars per car (car rental) will be assessed in addition to the regular switching rate on cars furnished by the Vandalia railroad for movement in switching service between industries on its lines or to industries or deliveries on other lines.”

The East Side Packing Company filed its complaint with the Railroad and Warehouse Commission, alleging that this charge for car rental was illegal and asking for an order prohibiting appellant from demanding or collecting it. The appellant answered the complaint, and after a hearing the commission made an order on January 18, 1912, that the appellant should desist from demanding, collecting or receiving any car rental in addition to its regular published tariff rate for switching. The appellant removed the case, by appeal, to the circuit court of Sangamon county, where the order of the commission was affirmed, and a further appeal was taken to this court.

Counsel for the appellant have filed a brief in accordance with the rules of the court, concluding with the points made, numbered from “1” to “vm,” inclusive, and stating under each point the authorities relied upon in support of it. The rules permit an argument in support of the brief, which must be confined to discussion and elaboration of the points contained in the brief. In this case the brief is followed by an argument containing subdivisions numbered from “1” to “v,” inclusive, in which the order of the points contained in the brief is not followed and some of the propositions stated and contended- for are different and placed on different grounds. The result is somewhat confusing, but an effort will be made to state fairly and dispose of all the propositions of counsel for appellant, whether contained in the brief or argument.

The answer filed with the commission stated: (1) That the commission had no jurisdiction, because the appellant, as a common carrier, was not required to perform the switching service, and for doing voluntarily what the law did not require, it could impose such terms as it desired, which would not be subject to review or adjustment by the commission, and further, the appellant could not compel other railroads to handle cars switched by it to their lines, and the commission could not compel it to take cars for points on other lines or fix the terms upon which it should take them; (2) that the charge for car rental was just and reasonable; (3) that the charge did not infringe any rule adopted by the commission, and any rule requiring the appellant to abolish the charge would be beyond the jurisdiction of the commission and contrary to the provisions of the State and Federal constitutions. In the brief filed here several of the points are stated and numbered as follows: (2) The commission is without authority to compel the appellant to perform a service without compensation, and is therefore without jurisdiction; (3) the commission is a tribunal possessing naked statutory powers, which are administrative and ministerial and neither legislative nor judicial; (4) jurisdiction of the commission must be confined to the cases clearly placed within its jurisdiction by the statute; (5) the law does not compel, a railroad company to send its cars onto the rails of another road. The second division of the argument is devoted to the question whether the commission had jurisdiction, and all of the above points are there re-stated as showing that it was without jurisdiction to act in the matter.

Talcing up the second proposition of the brief, the fact that the commission cannot compel the railroad company to perform a service for its patrons without compensation has no relation to the question of jurisdiction to hear a case and decide what is a legal or illegal, a reasonable or unreasonable, charge for a service. If the proposition has any relation to the case, it only concerns the correctness of the finding that the appellant must perform the switching service for the regular switching charge. It is true, as stated in the third and fourth points of the brief, that the commission possesses only statutory powers and its jurisdiction is confined to the exercise of such powers, but the jurisdiction exercised in this case is conferred by statute. The appellant is a common carrier and acts as such when engaged in switching cars in East St. Louis exactly as it does when moving cars between stations. By the act establishing the Board of Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners and prescribing their powers and duties the commission is expressly given jurisdiction over all common carriers within the State, and is authorized to establish reasonable switching rules and regulations and reasonable rates therefor, and to hear and determine all questions arising under the act.

The fifth point of the brief, that the law does not compel a railroad company to send its cars upon the rails of another road, has nothing to do with the question of jurisdiction. The argument repeats what was contained in the answer filed with the commission, as above stated, and counsel contend that because appellant cannot, by law, be compelled to permit its cars to leave its tracks, the switching service is not a public duty but a matter of private contract between the parties interested, like transporting goods by teams or gasoline trucks, and therefore the commission had no jurisdiction over the question of the charges for doing the service. Whether, in view of the universal and necessary practice of connecting roads, a railroad company accepting a shipment beyond its lines could be compelled to let its cars go through without unloading and re-shipping is not involved here. It did not concern the packing company, which paid connecting lines for transportation, whether the connecting carriers unloaded its property into cars of their own or whether the two lines used the cars of each other under some plan of compensation adopted by themselves. Perhaps there is no danger that they will ever adopt a rule by which goods will be unloaded at each junction,- which would be as much against the interest and convenience of railroad companies as anything that could be imagined. Whether the appellant could be compelled to do the switching service or not, it does perform the service and performs it as a common carrier. Whether it uses its own cars or the cars of some other company is of no interest to the shipper, and there has been no attempt to force appellant to permit its cars to go> beyond its rails. It accepts cars for shipment over connecting lines, and the only question here is what is a legal charge for the service. The commission had jurisdiction to hear and decide the case.

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Bluebook (online)
258 Ill. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-warehouse-commission-ex-rel-east-side-packing-co-v-vandalia-ill-1913.